Roaring 20 s Postwar Developments At Home The

Postwar Developments At Home The years after the “War to End ALL Wars” are characterized by: autos and assembly lines rising middle class more leisure time fear of immigrants fear of communism racial tensions. • Prohibition and gangsters • conflict between a “loose society “ and the “moral society”

1 st person to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. May 20, 1927 Charles A. Lindbergh flies his plane from New York City to Paris, France in 34 hours. Amelia Earheart becomes the 1 st woman to fly the Atlantic alone.

The Nineteenth Amendment ØAfter a long and bitter fight, the Nineteenth Amendment became part of the Constitution of the United States. Women could now vote. (1920)

• Flashy new dress, bobbed hair and cosmetics • liberated lifestyle • often seen smoking, drinking, dancing, and attending lively parties • most middle class women continued to stay at home as housewives and mothers • some began to find careers

Women at the turn of the Century

Flappers of the 1920’s

Young writers and intellectuals believed this new modern society was cold, materialistic, and impersonal - without opportunities for personal fulfillment. • Blames WWI - Ernest Hemingway’s novel, A Farewell to Arms, tells about his generation’s contempt for the war. • F. Scott Fitzgerald explores the new youth culture Ernest in novels like, The Great Gatsby and The Hemmingway Other Side of Paradise.

Black intellectuals created a thriving Afro-American culture in New York’s Harlem. Poets, artists, novelists, and musicians inspire and encourage African Americans to remain strong in the face of racial violence

The musical innovation of the decade! ØStarted in New Orleans with African rhythms and songs, followed the Mississippi to northern cities.

I, too, sing America. I am the darker brother. They send me to eat in the kitchen When company comes, But I laugh, And eat well, And grow strong. Tomorrow, I'll be at the table When company comes. Nobody'll dare Say to me, "Eat in the kitchen, " Then. Besides, They'll see how beautiful I am And be ashamed I, too, am America.

18 TH AMENDMENT Prohibits the manufacture, transport and sale of liquor after January 16, 1920. The Volstead Act was enacted by Congress to ensure the proper enforcement of Prohibition.

Prohibition was a constitutional amendment that prohibited the use of alcohol. Prohibition, in many ways, led to the rise of organized crime • Government hires Gangsters, only 1, 500 agents to Bootleggers, enforce Prohibition. and Speakeasies • Ordinary people defied the law, many making become a part of bathtub gin at home. the Prohibition • Churches could still culture. use wine for sacramental purposes and doctors could prescribe alcohol for medicinal reasons

Al Capone

Special Law Enforcement Agents were needed to investigate and bring charges against the power of organized crime.

“Butler Law” prohibited the teaching of evolution in the classroom. The ACLU hoped to use the Scopes case to test (and defeat)Fundamentalist meddling in politics. Judge John Raulston began the trial by reading the first 27 verses of Genesis.

Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryant

The Soaring Stock Market Mass production: cars, radios, refrigerators. People could buy on credit. There is massive consumer spending. Confidence that Prosperity was here to stay!! With more money to spend people invested on the stock market. • American industry booms, price of shares move up • Investors sell their shares at higher prices and make huge profits Get Rich, Quick!! • More people invest, pushing prices higher • People buy “on the margin” Let’s get RICH!!!!

Signs of Trouble • 50% of American families earned less than $2000 a year. • American Industry was producing too many goods. • Farmers - crops prices had dropped. • Coal miners - oil replacing coal as major source of energy. • Textile industry - fashions dictated less fabric. • Unions - had little power to help laid off workers. • Business held down workers wages - less buying power - decline in demand for products like cars, appliances, and homes. • Production slows - more workers lose jobs. • American banks suffered when European nations failed to pay back $$ borrowed after WWI.